Tuesday, September 24, 1985 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan Rv The Associated Press N Stuidly calls for dhaMges in daily vitsiiniiii intake WASHINGTON - A National Academy of Sciences committee is completing a study that calls for changing the daily recommended dietary allowances of certain vitamins and minerals, a move that critics say could have important effects on the nutritional habits of the nation. The draft report, which has not been concluded or released, also will make a subtle change in the definition of recommended dietary allowances, or RDAs, that the authors say is more realistic. Dr. Henry Kamin of Duke University, chairman of the academy's committee on dietary allowances, said Monday that the proposed new RDAs are not designed to establish minimum stan dards, but to assure what is healthy for all Americans. "We make dietary nutrient recom mendations within the context of the American diet as it is, not as it should be or not as interpreted by food fadists,'' Kamin said in a telephone interview. Gail Porter, a spokesperson for the academy, a private, congressionally chartered organization that does stu dies for the government, said the report still is in the review process and may not be ready for release until the end of the year. However, The New York Times said a draft of the report it obtained called for decreasing recommended allowances of vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin B-6 and iron, while increasing the suggested intake of calcium for women. Michael R. Lemov, executive direc tor of the Food Research and Action Center, a non-profit, public interest group, said his group learned of the proposals and opposes them. "We fear that decreased RDAs will be used to 'prove that fewer people are hungry in the United States," Lemov said in a statement. "It would be very convenient at this time to be able to wipe out hunger with a simple change in the numbers." RDAs are used in planning the food intake of people of all ages in food programs at hospitals, schools and other institutions. They also are used in developing dietary supplements, new food products, diets and for nutritional labeling on packages. Since 1943, a committee of the academy's Food and Nutrition Board has revised the RDAs every five years to keep pace with the nation's changing needs. The latest official nutrient report, issued in 1980, defined RDAs as the intake of essential nutrients consi dered "adequate to meet the known nutritional needs of practically all healthy persons." The new definition, Kamin confirmed, would define RDAs as the levels of essential nutrients needed "to protect practically all healthy persons against nutritional deficiencies." Kamin said the subtle difference re flects the fact that the committee does not know what the "nutritional needs of practically all (healthy) persons" are because of the diversity of dietary patterns in the country. SAT scores make record gains NEW YORK - Led by a strong upsurge by Mexican-American and Puerto Rican students, average Scholas tic Aptitude Test scores posted their biggest gains in 22 years, the College Board announced Monday. Average combined math and verbal SAT scores in 1985 rose nine points to 906 the largest year-to-year climb since 1963 when scores rose nine points before beginning a 22-year slide. College Board president George H. Hanford made the official announce ment at a news conference that scores for the Class of 1 985 rose five points on the verbal SAT to 431 and four points in math to 475. SAT averages had leveled and turned up slightly in the past several years, but the gain in 1985 was the first that could be considered a decisive upturn. "All minority groups showed improve ments on the SAT in 1985, and nearly all states had increases in their aver age scores. There was also a continued rise in the percentge of 'high scorers' those students who score over 600 on either part of the SAT. Nearly 77,000 students did so on the verbal half of the SAT and 167,000 on the math section," Hanford said. Puerto Rican youngsters showed the biggest year-to-year gains, up 10 points, in verbal to a 368 average, and up six points to 428 on the math. Mexican Amerian gained six points on both math and verbal scores, averaging 426 and 382 respectively. Black students gained four points to 346 on the verbal, and rose three points to 376 on the math, while white young sters rose four points on both math (491) and verbal (449). Both groups thus trailed the average nationwide SAT gain. Hanford said the public should be encouraged by the turn-around in SAT scores and other signs that American high schools are getting tougher. "But it is also clear that we have no grounds for being complacent about the state of education in this country. Despite the gains of the past few years, we are yet a combined total of 74 points behind the scores of 1963, the last high points in this SAT saga. We still have a long way to go." National Security Conineil: White House Agency 's involvement increases By W. Dale Nelson The Associated Press WASHINGTON The National Security Council's behind-the-scenes maneuvering in the release of an Amer ican clergyman held hostage in Lebanon illustrates the operational side of the White House policy-making bedy. Organized nearly four decades ago primarily to process paperwork for the president, the staff of the little-known White House agency at times under takes tasks that could be assigned to the State and Defense departments or the Central Intelligence Agency. The NSC staff is far less accountable to Congress and operates outside of the public eye. But its influence inside-the government appears to be growing. The council staff was especially active in the Middle East hostage crisis arising from the hijacking of a TWA jetliner and in the kidnapping of Amer icans in Lebanon. Asked about the efforts to free the Rev. Benjamin Weir who was released Sept. 14 and six other Americans who still are being held hostage in Lebanon, a usually well-informed State Depart ment official pleaded ignorance. "It's an NSC operation. No one here knows about it," said the official, who spoke on condition he not be identified. , Some academic experts and aides from former administrations believe the NSC staff has become too embroiled in day-to-day management in recent years and should be attending more strictly to policy making, leaving the operational details to the State and Defense departments. Others say the council staff is just doing what it has been doing more or less steadily at least since the Kennedy administration and its role is no cause for concern. But observers in both camps agree that the staff of the council, which was established in 1947, is doing much more than it did in its early days under President Truman and Eisenhower. The NSC's members are President Reagan, Vice President George Bush, Secretary of State George Shultz and Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, CIA Director William Casey and Adm. , William Drowe Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are advisers. The council is supposed to help the presi dent formulate foreign and military policy. Robert McFarlane, the president's national security adviser, heads the NSC staff, but is not a member of the council. The staff includes about 35 foreign policy experts and about 100 other employees who provide adminis trative assistance and run the White House Situation Room. Several scholars said NSC staff mem bers had traditionally been active in preparation for summit meetings and accompanied high-ranking government officials on missions abroad. Morton Halperin, now director Qf the Washington office of the American Civil Liberties Union and an NSC staffer under Henry Kissinger, said the coun cil, rather than confining itself to pol icy making, "has been an operating agency for a very long time; it's just gotten bigger and more bureaucratic." A roundup of the day's happenings Police are investigating a panty raid on the Nebraska Wesley an University Delta Zeta sorority house where about 25 men allegedly used force against six women and stole almost $500 of undergarments. The 25 could face strong arm robbery charges. A Moscow street has been renamed for the late Soviet leader Konstantin U. Chernenko, who would have been 74 today. A red granite marker also was set up. The Et&te Department says the death toU in the two Mexican earthquakes has reached 3,461, including five Americans. About 6,700 people have been treated for injuries. H&gerstown, Md., officials are investigating a power surge that blew fuses and damaged household appliances in a two-block section of the community. Municipal Electric Light Plant workers apparently hooked up the wrong line to a transformer, sending 240 volts of electricity along lines that normally carry 110 volts. Gov. Bob Kerrey told members of organized labor at an AFL-CIO state convention they should continue to fight against conditions that are wrong or unjust, and move to correct them. n ED tie I? Commonwealth bill advances 30-5 LINCOLN The Legislature gave overwhelming second-round appro val Monday to a bill that would pay an $8.5 million claim on behalf of Commonwealth Savings Uo. depositors. With the expected seven-aay specie 5w nuuung on scneaule, lawmakers voted ou-o 10 move w wuwww v u wis away Kjmft and transfer to Gov. Bob Kerrey's desk. Kerrey convened the racial scc;m r t u.':.:,. y v...ca Attorney 3cr."::I Hcicrt Spire concluded LVt, s:n ?ri' - I-' parsed this ,-ear 1 iJ defects preveniirg the iS.5 r.ii'.lcn t:.t r :r,cnt. G . . . i j ....1 t ... , - - .... j nn f :I::e giving secona-rcur.j zs.v, ,.k. oj-o, an ar:r, : . -.t c:red ty Na!i;i Sen. JcLi DtCar? V i r l;:c:cd a settle ir.cr.t Utwcea the stats Ranking Department cr.i tit Lrrtcartcr County j.-i,j.f,j Cert T1.3 amendment, which net no rcsictsr.ee frcra Li - ;:h creators shep Kerrey's LB1 through the Legislature, would release the state from lei liability in Commonwealth's collapse, - Tlis amendment still gives depositors one avenua to sack more money Iron t!;e state a miscellaneous claim based on cn ar-ar.eat that the stats b morally liable in Commonwealth's Nov. 1, 1033 coiizpse. Fall gas prices expected to drop LIXCCLII Gasc!:r.9 prices apparently v.ill (!:;? t;,!3 LIl and winter for the second straight year, prcvidir.3 v.xlccr.s relief Lr ractcrists after a surair :r cf L-crcascs at the pun:?. . C:3 prices in Lir.ec.'n aireaiy have dropped an ever:; -3 cf one or two ccr.ts in tl:3 last month. A recent $3-a-barrcl drcp i:i the price cf ends ell is aa ir. i-cation that mere price drops are on the way, saii H. L Clark cf the Ccrr.husker AAA Jury picked in 14-year-old's trial ECLOfT, Wis. A 1 4-year-old bey went cn trial cn delinquency charges Monday in the slayira rf a 9-year-old v, ho refused to share his bicycle, and jurors' 'were asked vi.-ther they doubted that a person so young could commit murder. v None responded whn District Attorney James Daley asked the ques tion during j';ry selection for the trial cf the oldest of the three youngsters accused cf beating end stabbing Anthony Darnell Wilson. Circuit Judge Patrick Rude emphasized to prospective jurors that the defendant was being tried on a juvenile delinquency petition and was not charged under laws that apply to adults. " . A 12-year-old boy also has been charged with delinquency and his trial is scheduled Oct. 14. He is being held at the Eock county Youth Home. The third defendant is an 11-year-old girl, but under Wisconsin law a youthful defendant must be at least 12 to be charged with delinquency. She is to stand trial Oct. 21 to determine if she is "a child in need of protection and services" for her alleged role in the incident. She has been released to the custody of relatives. ' All three children have pleaded innocent. Accused Rulo men waive hearings FALLS CITY Two men accused of murder on a survivalist farm near Rulo waived their rights to preliminary hearings Monday in Richardson County Court. v Michael Ryan, 37, and Timothy Haverkamp, 23, waived their hearings in brief separate appearances before Richardson County Judge Thomas Gist. He scheduled the arraignment of both men for Oct. 10 in district court. Ryan, who was the reputed leader of a religious survivalist group that lives on the Rulo farm, is charged with two countsf first-degree murder in the deaths of Luke Stice, 5, and James Thimmr 25. The bodies of Stice and Thimm were found in unmarked graves during a search cf the farm on Aug. 18. Haverkamp is charged with first-degree murder in Thimm's death. - Attorneys for Ryan and Haverkamp said one of the reasons they waived the preliminary hearings was a concern over pre-trial publicity. Last week, Gist denied the attorney's motion to close the hearings. FarmAid proceeds way below goal CHAMPAIGN, 111. At $9 million so far, proceed from the all-star FarmAid benefit concert appeared to be running short of the goal Monday but organizers said they would be happy if the event triggered new interest in farmers' problems. By the time the 14 hour concert ended and 50 stars cf country, rock and blues had left the stage early Monday, FarmAid had raised more than $9 million. That was way below singer Willie Nelson's prediction of raising S30 million. , Nelson, who organized Sunday's show, said FarraAii received about $4 million from corporate donations and ticket sale;, a.:, J rc;:-.!jr $5 million in pledges from television viewers and radio Kstc;:irs. But tabulation of the pledges was inccmp kte. ; The FarmAid money will be used for cr,h grants t ) r.c : y f -nners, legal aid, counseling and job training, a nation-Aids k:r.aiicri hotline and a campaign to increase awareness cf farm prc-l; : : Reagan outlines new trade policy WASHINGTON President Reagan, trying to stave oil legislation to protect battered American industries frcra ilz, ) I, rcrts, outlined a practices abroad and epen ftrei r.a to U.S. f . 'j. I v.ul not stand ty a.d vetch A "ic"i L" r s t 'I because of unia:rtrad.r3pr-cticc3a'.rcaV'rr j ! 1 " - II-.r' tolr.viaak- w.cct.. at. "l . J r.c t stan U y t - iv t:c:;r? ether tlKgw j r. t r 1 .1 ' . ..... ..j 111 r s : - f to r?ar his .;jL:3tncr 1 1 , r .,1 c c